1. The National Labor Relations Act does not forbid or penalize
expression by an employer to his employees of his views on labor
policies. P.
314 U. S.
476.
2. Conduct, though evidence in part by speech, may amount, in
connection with other circumstances, to coercion within the meaning
of the Act. In determining whether an employer actually interfered
with, restrained, and coerced its employees, the Board may look at
what it said, as well as what it did. P.
314 U. S.
477.
3. Where the Board specifically found that certain spoken and
posted utterances by the employer were unfair labor practices, the
adequacy of which finding was doubtful if the utterances were
separated from their background, and it was not certain from the
Board's decision that its conclusion was based on the whole course
of conduct during the period in question, of which the utterances
were a part,
held that the case must be returned to the
Board for a redetermination. P.
314 U. S.
479.
115 F.2d reversed.
Certiorari, 312 U.S. 677, to review a judgment setting aside an
order of the National Labor Relations Board, 20 N.L.R.B. 911,
requiring the above-named power company
Page 314 U. S. 470
among other things, to withdraw recognition of, and
disestablish, a union with which it had contracted. The company and
the independent union filed separate petitions in the court below
to review and set aside the order. The Board answered and prayed
enforcement of the order.
MR. JUSTICE MURPHY delivered the opinion of the Court.
Upon the usual proceedings [
Footnote 1] had pursuant to section 10 of the National
Labor Relations Act, [
Footnote
2] the Board made substantially the following findings of
fact:
For years prior to the events in this case, the Virginia
Electric and Power Company (hereinafter called the Company)
Page 314 U. S. 471
was hostile to labor organizations. From 1922, when a strike was
unsuccessful by a nationally affiliated union, [
Footnote 3] until the formation of the Independent
Organization of Employees (hereinafter called the Independent) in
1937, there was no labor organization among its employees. Shortly
after the enactment of the National Industrial Recovery Act in
1933, 48 Stat. 195, Holtzclaw, the president of the Company, spoke
to the employees and stated that any organization among them was
"entirely unnecessary." Until his death in May, 1937, the Company
utilized the services of one Walters, an employee of the Railway
Audit and Inspection Company who, prior to the effective date of
the Act, admittedly furnished a report on the labor activity of the
employees to the Company. In 1936, Bishop, Superintendent of
Transportation in Norfolk, interrogated employees concerning union
activities. On April 26, 1937, shortly after the Act was upheld,
[
Footnote 4] and an A.F. of L.
organizer had appeared, the Company posted a bulletin [
Footnote 5] throughout its operations
appealing to the
Page 314 U. S. 472
employees to bargain with the Company directly without the
intervention of an "outside" union, and thereby coerced its
employees. In response to this bulletin, several requests for
increased wages and better working conditions were received.
[
Footnote 6] The Company
decided to withhold action on those requests, and directed its
employees to select representatives to attend meetings at which
Company officials would speak on the Wagner Act. These
representatives
Page 314 U. S. 473
met in Norfolk and Richmond on May 24 and were addressed by high
Company officials who read identical speeches [
Footnote 7] stressing the desirability of forming
a bargaining
Page 314 U. S. 474
agency. At the Richmond meeting, it was announced that any wage
increase granted would be retroactive to June 1. By the substance
of the speeches and the mechanics of the meetings, the Company gave
impetus to and assured the creation of an "inside" organization,
and coerced its employees in the exercise of their rights
guaranteed by section 7 of the Act. Meetings, arranged with the
cooperation of Company supervisors, on Company property and in some
instances on Company time, followed at which the May 24 speeches
were reported to the men who voted to form an "inside" organization
and selected committees for that purpose. These committees met on
Company property until June 15, when the constitution of the
Independent was adopted.
On June 17, application cards for the Independent were
distributed throughout the entire system of the Company, and many
were signed on Company property and time. Within three weeks after
the adoption of the constitution of the Independent, a majority of
the employees filled out application cards. By July 13, the
organization was complete, and permanent committeemen had been
elected. A majority of those committeemen had been present at the
May 24 meetings. On July 19, the Independent notified the Company
that it represented a majority of the employees, and submitted a
proposed contract. Negotiations were begun on July 30, and
agreement was reached by midnight of the following day. The
contract was formally executed on August 5, and provided,
inter
alia, for a closed shop, a check-off, and a wage increase. On
August 20, the Company paid $3,784.50 to the Independent, although
it had not yet deducted that entire amount from the employees'
wages. On November 4, the date upon which the closed shop provision
became effective, the Company discharged two employees, Staunton
and Elliott, because they refused to join the Independent. In
March, 1938, it discharged another employee, Harrell, for his
membership and activity in an outside union.
Upon the basis of these findings and the entire record in the
case, the Board concluded that the Company had committed unfair
labor practices within the meaning of section 8(1), (2) and (3) of
the Act. Its order directed the Company to cease and desist from
its unfair labor practices and from giving effect to its contract
with the Independent, to withdraw recognition from and disestablish
that organization, to reinstate with back pay the four wrongfully
discharged employees, to reimburse each of its employees who was a
member of the Independent in the amount of the dues and assessments
checked off his wages by the Company on behalf of the Independent,
and to post appropriate notices.
Page 314 U. S. 476
The Company and the Independent filed separate petitions in the
court below to review and set aside the Board's order. The Board
answered and requested enforcement of its order against the
Company. The court below denied enforcement to any part of the
Board's order, completely setting it aside. [
Footnote 8] We granted the petition for writs of
certiorari because the case was thought to present important
questions in the administration of the Act. 312 U.S. 677.
The Company is engaged in the business of generating and
distributing electrical energy in eastern Virginia and northeastern
North Carolina. It also furnishes illuminating gas to customers in
the vicinity of Norfolk, Virginia, and operates transportation
services in Richmond, Norfolk, Portsmouth, and Petersburg. It does
not here renew the contention, correctly decided against it by the
court below, [
Footnote 9] that
the jurisdiction of the Board does not extend to its employees in
the gas and transportation departments.
Domination of the Independent
The command of section 10(e) of the Act that "the findings of
the Board as to the facts, if supported by evidence, shall be
conclusive" precludes an independent consideration of the facts.
Bearing this in mind, we must ever guard against allowing our views
to be substituted for those of the agency which Congress has
created to administer the Act. But here, the Board's conclusion
that the Independent was a Company-dominated union seems based
heavily upon findings which are not free from ambiguity and doubt.
We believe that the Board, and not this Court, should undertake the
task of clarification.
The Board specifically found that the bulletin of April 26 and
the speeches of May 24 "interfered with, restrained,
Page 314 U. S. 477
and coerced" the Company's employees in the exercise of their
rights guaranteed by § 7 of the Act. The Company strongly urges
that such a finding is repugnant to the First Amendment. Neither
the Act nor the Board's order here enjoins the employer from
expressing its view on labor policies or problems, nor is a penalty
imposed upon it because of any utterances which it has made. The
sanctions of the Act are imposed not in punishment of the employer,
but for the protection of the employees. The employer in this case
is as free now as ever to take any side it may choose on this
controversial issue. But certainly conduct, though evidenced in
part by speech, may amount in connection with other circumstances
to coercion within the meaning of the Act. If the total activities
of an employer restrain or coerce his employees in their free
choice, then those employees are entitled to the protection of the
Act. And, in determining whether a course of conduct amounts to
restraint or coercion, pressure exerted vocally by the employer may
no more be disregarded than pressure exerted in other ways. For
"Slight suggestions as to the employer's choice between unions
may have telling effect among men who know the consequences of
incurring that employer's strong displeasure."
International Association of Machinists v. Labor Board,
311 U. S. 72,
311 U. S.
78.
If the Board's order here may fairly be said to be based on the
totality of the Company's activities during the period in question,
we may not consider the findings of the Board as to the coercive
effect of the bulletin and the speeches in isolation from the
findings as respects the other conduct of the Company. If the
Board's ultimate conclusion is based upon a complex of activities,
such as the anti-union background of the Company, the activities of
Bishop, Edwards' warning to the employees that they would be
discharged for "messing with the
Page 314 U. S. 478
CIO," the discharge of Mann, the quick formation of the
Independent, and the part which the management may have played in
that formation, that conclusion would not be vitiated by the fact
that the Board considered what the Company said in conjunction with
what it did. The mere fact that language merges into a course of
conduct does not put that whole course without the range of
otherwise applicable administrative power. In determining whether
the Company actually interfered with, restrained, and coerced its
employees, the Board has a right to look at what the Company has
said, as well as what it has done.
But, from the Board's decision, we are far from clear that the
Board here considered the whole complex of activities, of which the
bulletin and the speeches are but parts, in reaching its ultimate
conclusion with regard to the Independent. The Board regarded the
bulletin on its face as showing a marked bias against national
unions by implying that strikes and unrest are caused by the
organizational campaigns of such bodies, by stressing the "happy
relationship of mutual confidence and understanding" prevailing in
the absence of organization since the defeat of the Amalgamated in
1922, and by emphasizing the negative "right" of the employees to
refrain from exercising their rights guaranteed under the Act after
paying "lip service" to those rights. Summing up its conclusions,
the Board said:
"We interpret the bulletin as an appeal to the employees to
bargain with the respondent directly, without the intervention of
any 'outside' union. We find that, by posting the bulletin, the
respondent interfered with, restrained, and coerced its employees
in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the
Act."
The Board was of the view that the speeches delivered in the
meetings of May 24 provided the impetus for the formation of a
systemwide organization, that they reemphasized
Page 314 U. S. 479
the Company's distaste for "outside" organizations by referring
to the bulletin, and that, after quoting the provision of the Act
forbidding employer domination of labor organizations, they
suggested that the employees select their "own" officers, and adopt
their "own" bylaws and rules. The Board's finding was:
"We find that, at the May 24 meetings, the respondent urged its
employees to organize, and to do so independently of 'outside'
assistance, and that it thereby interfered with, restrained, and
coerced its employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in
Section 7 of the Act."
It is clear that the Board specifically found that those
utterances were unfair labor practices, and it does not appear that
the Board raised them to the stature of coercion by reliance on the
surrounding circumstances. If the utterances are thus to be
separated from their background, we find it difficult to sustain a
finding of coercion with respect to them alone. The bulletin and
the speeches set forth the right of the employees to do as they
please, without fear of retaliation by the Company. Perhaps the
purport of these utterances may be altered by imponderable
subtleties at work which it is not our function to appraise.
Whether there are sufficient findings and evidence of interference,
restraint, coercion, and domination without reference to the
bulletin and the speeches, or whether the whole course of conduct
evidenced in part by the utterances was aimed at achieving
objectives forbidden by the Act, are questions for the Board to
decide upon the evidence.
Here, we are not sufficiently certain from the findings that the
Board based its conclusion with regard to the Independent upon the
whole course of conduct revealed by this record. Rather, it appears
that the Board rested heavily upon findings with regard to the
bulletin and the speeches the adequacy of which we regard as
doubtful. We therefore remand the cause to the Circuit Court of
Appeals with directions to remand it to the Board for a
Page 314 U. S. 480
redetermination of the issues in the light of this opinion. We
do not mean to intimate any views of our own as to whether the
Independent was dominated or suggest to the Board what its
conclusion should be when it reconsiders the case. Since the Board
rested the remainder of its order in large part on its findings
with respect to the domination of the Independent, we do not at
this time reach the other parts of the Board's order, including the
command that the checked-off dues and assessments should be
refunded.
Reversed and remanded.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS and MR. JUSTICE JACKSON took no part in the
consideration or decision of this case.
* Together with No. 26,
National Labor Relations Board v.
Independent Organization of Employees of the Virginia Electric
& Power Co., also on writ of certiorari, 312 U.S. 677, to
the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit.
[
Footnote 1]
These proceedings were instituted on charges and amended charges
filed in 1937 and 1938 by the Transport Workers Union of America,
affiliated with the Congress of Industrial Organizations, by the
Amalgamated Association of Street, Electrical Railway, and Motor
Coach Employees of America, and by the International Brotherhood of
Electrical Workers, the latter two being affiliated with the
American Federation of Labor. The complaint, as amended, charged
that the employer, respondent in No. 25, had engaged in unfair
labor practices within the meaning of section 8(1), (2), and (3) of
the Act, 29 U.S.C. § 158(1), (2), and (3). The Independent
Organization of Employees of the Virginia Electric and Power
Company, respondent in No. 26, was allowed to intervene with
respect to the 8(2) charge, was represented by counsel, and
participated throughout the proceedings.
[
Footnote 2]
49 Stat. 449, 29 U.S.C. § 151
et seq.
[
Footnote 3]
Amalgamated Association of Street, Electrical Railway, and Motor
Coach Employees of America.
[
Footnote 4]
Labor Board v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp.,
301 U. S. 1, and
companion cases.
[
Footnote 5]
The Bulletin read as follows:
"April 26, 1937"
"
To the Employees of the Company:"
"As a result of recent national labor organization activities
and the interpretation of the Wagner Labor Act by the Supreme
Court, employees of companies such as ours may be approached in the
near future by representatives of one or more such labor
organizations to solicit their membership. Such campaigns are now
being pressed in various industries and in different parts of the
country, and strikes and unrest have developed in many localities.
For the last fifteen years, this company and its employees have
enjoyed a happy relationship of mutual confidence and understanding
with each other, and, during this period, there has not been any
labor organization among our employees in any department, so far as
the management is aware. Under these circumstances, we feel that
our employees are entitled to know certain facts and have a
statement as to the Company's attitude with reference to this
matter."
"The Company recognizes the right of every employee to join any
union that he may wish to join, and such membership will not affect
his position with the company. On the other hand, we feel that it
should be made equally clear to each employee that it is not at all
necessary for him to join any labor organization, despite anything
he may be told to the contrary. Certainly there is no law which
requires or is intended to compel you to pay dues to, or to join,
any organization."
"This company has always dealt with its employees in full
recognition of the right of every individual employee, or group of
employees, to deal directly with the Company with respect to
matters affecting their interests. If any of you, individually or
as a group at any time, have any matter which you wish to discuss
with us, any officer or department head will be glad, as they
always have been, to meet with you and discuss them frankly and
fully. It is our earnest desire to straighten out in a friendly
manner, as we have done in the past, whatever questions you may
have in mind. It is reasonable to believe that our interests are
mutual, and can best be promoted through confidence and
cooperation."
"(signed) J. G. HOLTZCLAW,"
"
President"
[
Footnote 6]
Included in those requests was a petition from a majority of the
Norfolk transportation employees which was the result of two
meetings on Company property during working hours on May 11, 1937,
in response to unsigned notices placed in the dispatcher's office
by A. R. Ruett, a car operator. Both Ruett, and R. E. Elliott, who
assumed the leadership in those meetings, testified that
Superintendent Bishop had urged them to form an inside organization
after warning them against the CIO. Bishop denied this, and the
Board made no finding.
[
Footnote 7]
"A substantial number of its employees representing various
departments and various occupations have approached the Company
with the request that the Company consider with them the matter of
their working conditions and wages. In other words, they have
requested collective bargaining. The Company's position with
respect to this was recently stated in a posted bulletin."
"In a company such as ours, if an individual operator, for
example, should ask for himself better working conditions or wages,
this Company could not comply with his request without also making
the same concessions to other similar operators. In such a case,
the operator who appealed individually would, as a practical
matter, be bargaining collectively for all of his group, which is
not the logical procedure."
"This Company is willing to consider the requests mentioned
above, but feels that, in fairness to all of its employees and to
itself, it should at the same time consider other groups who have
not yet come to it. If the approaching negotiations are to be
intelligent and fair to all properly concerned, they should be
conducted in an orderly way, and all interested groups should be
represented in these discussions by representatives of their own
choosing, as provided in the Wagner National Labor Relations Act,
which provides as follows:"
" SEC. 7. Employees shall have the right to self-organization,
to form, join, or assist labor organizations, to bargain
collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and to
engage in concerted activities, for the purpose of collective
bargaining or other mutual aid or protection."
"The Wagner Act applies only to employees whose work is in or
directly affects interstate commerce and to companies engaged in
interstate commerce. Counsel for this Company advise us that, in
their opinion, the provisions of the Act do not apply to local
transportation employees, to gas employees in Norfolk, or to
certain strictly local employees of the light and power department.
In spite of this, the Company wants to make it perfectly clear that
its policy is one of willingness to bargain with its employees in
any manner satisfactory to the majority of its employees, and that
no employee will be discriminated against because of any labor
affiliations he desires to make."
"The petitions and representations already received indicate a
desire on the part of these employees at least to do their own
bargaining, and we are taking this means of letting you know our
willingness to proceed with such bargaining in an orderly manner.
In order to progress, it would seem that the first step necessary
to be taken by you is the formation of a bargaining agency and the
selection of authorized representatives to conduct this bargaining
in such an orderly manner."
"The Wagner Labor Act prohibits a company from 'dominating or
interfering with the formation or administration of any labor
organization or contribute [
sic] financial or other
support to it.'"
"In view of your request to bargain directly with the Company,
and in view of your right to self-organization as provided in the
law, it will facilitate negotiations if you will proceed to set up
your organization, select your own officers and adviser, adopt your
own bylaws and rules, and select your representatives to meet with
the Company officials whenever you desire."
[
Footnote 8]
Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. Labor Board, 115
F.2d 414.
[
Footnote 9]
Ibid., 415-416.